Eyo Festival: When Lagos turned White and FirstBank rewrote the Language of Culture

Eyo masquerades, Firstbank
FirstBank’s sponsorship of the Eyo Festival was not a decorative gesture. It was a statement.
On Saturday, December 27, 2025, Lagos did not merely host an event; it inhaled history. From the early hours of the morning, the ancient city seemed to exhale white-white robes, white caps, white devotion, until the air itself appeared scented with tradition. The iconic return of the Eyo Festival after eight years was not just a cultural revival; it was a carefully orchestrated renaissance, powered in no small measure by First Bank, whose presence at the heart of the celebration transformed heritage into a living, breathing economic narrative.
At the centre of it all stood Tafawa Balewa Square, reborn for one unforgettable day as the epicentre of Lagos’ cultural soul. The square, already steeped in national symbolism, was awash with a striking visual harmony: the sacred white of the Eyos blending seamlessly with the unmistakable blue identity of First Bank. Banners fluttered proudly, canopies gleamed under the December sun, and every pathway whispered the same message-culture lives here, and it is being deliberately supported.
FirstBank’s sponsorship of the Eyo Festival was not a decorative gesture. It was a statement. Anchored in its First@Arts initiative and amplified through the DecemberIssaVybe campaign, the bank approached the festival as infrastructure rather than entertainment. Culture, in this vision, is not a relic of the past but a catalyst for growth, tourism, and national pride.
As Lagos entered its peak “Detty December” moment, when the city becomes a magnet for the diaspora and global visitors, the timing could not have been more strategic. The Eyo Festival became the crown jewel in a calendar bursting with concerts, carnivals, and nightlife. Yet amid the noise, it was the disciplined joy of the white-robed masquerades that commanded silence, reverence, and awe.
Walking through the festival grounds, one could feel it, FirstBank did not just sponsor the Eyo Festival, it inhabited it. The atmosphere “smelled” of FirstBank, not in fragrance, but in presence. From branded installations to customer engagement booths, the bank embedded itself into the rhythm of the day. Large number of FirstBank staff, proudly clad in branded attire, moved with purpose and warmth, opening new accounts, guiding curious onlookers, and turning cultural celebration into tangible financial inclusion.
For many first-time visitors, both Nigerians from the diaspora and foreign tourists, it was a powerful introduction, a financial institution that understands that heritage is currency, and that trust is built not only in banking halls but also in public squares where identity is celebrated.
FirstBank
The 2025 edition carried profound communal weight, honouring four eminent Lagosians whose lives helped shape the state and the nation: Mobolaji Johnson, Lateef Jakande, Michael Otedola, and Alhaja Abibatu Mogaji. Their remembrance elevated the festival beyond spectacle into solemn tribute, a reminder that Lagos does not forget its builders.
The presence of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, resplendent in full traditional regalia, reinforced the festival’s national significance. Describing culture as a “valuable tool for destination promotion,” the President’s words echoed the very philosophy First Bank has long championed: that Nigeria’s traditions are assets waiting to be strategically amplified.
Beside him, Babajide Sanwo-Olu framed the moment as both historic and deeply personal, a homecoming of culture and leadership. His assurance that Lagos would continue to pursue economic growth without abandoning its roots found a visible partner in First Bank’s long-standing commitment to arts and heritage.
Globally, cultural tourism is one of the fastest-growing segments of travel, contributing trillions of dollars to major economies. First Bank’s approach recognises that Lagos, with its layered history and restless creativity, is uniquely positioned to compete on that global stage. By partnering with the Lagos State Government on the Eyo Festival, the bank helped bridge the gap between sacred tradition and global destination branding.
The result was a festival that felt both ancient and modern, where chants older than the nation met contemporary logistics, branding, and audience engagement. This is what it looks like when culture is treated as infrastructure: jobs created, tourism stimulated, pride restored.
As the Eyos processed through the square-Akintoye, Ashogbon, Aromire, Apena, Ojora, Elegushi, and many others, the crowd moved as one body, unified by history. Phones were raised, but so were hearts. For a moment, Lagos was not rushing. Lagos was remembering.
And as the sun dipped and the white-robed figures gradually returned to their Iga houses, one truth lingered unmistakably in the air, First Bank had not merely funded an event, it had helped Lagos tell its story to the world.
Lagos is not just a city, it is an idea-restless, resilient, ceremonial. Through First@Arts and DecemberIssaVybe, First Bank is ensuring that the Eyo Festival is not a once-in-eight-years memory but a sustainable pillar of Nigeria’s creative economy. It is a declaration that when culture is amplified with intention and investment, it becomes power.
In the quiet after the drums faded, as the last banners fluttered and the square slowly emptied, the message was clear, Nigeria’s greatness is not hidden. It walks our streets in white robes. And when institutions like First Bank choose to walk alongside it, the world cannot help but notice.